γάρ, a conjunction, which according to its composition,
γέ and
ἄρα (equivalent to
ἄρ), is properly a particle of affirmation and conclusion, denoting
truly therefore, verily as the case stands, "the thing is first affirmed by the particle
γέ, and then is referred to what precedes by the force of the particle
ἄρα" (
Klotz ad Devar. ii. 1, p. 232; cf. Kühner, ii., p. 724; [Jelf, § 786; Winers Grammar, 445f (415f)]). Now since by a new affirmation not infrequently the reason and nature of something previously mentioned are set forth, it comes to pass that, by the use of this particle, either the reason and cause of a foregoing statement is added, whence arises the causal or argumentative force of the particle,
for (Latin
nam,
enim; German
denn); or some previous declaration is explained, whence
γάρ takes on an explicative force:
for, the fact is, namely (Latin
videlicet, German
nämlich). Thus the force of the particle is either conclusive, or demonstrative, or explicative and declaratory; cf.
Rost in Passow's Lexicon, i., p. 535ff; Kühner, ii., pp. 724ff, 852ff; [cf. Liddell and Scott, under the word]. The use of the particle in the
N. T. does not differ from that in the classics.
I. Its primary and original Conclusive force is seen in questions (in Greek writings also in exclamations) and answers expressed with emotion; where, according to the connexion, it may be freely represented by
assuredly, verily, forsooth, why, then, etc.:
ἐν γὰρ τούτῳ etc. ye profess not to know whence he is; herein then is assuredly a marvellous thing,
why, herein etc.
John 9:30;
οὐ γάρ,
ἀλλά etc. by no means in this state of things,
nay verily, but etc.
Acts 16:37; certainly, if that is the case,
1 Corinthians 8:11 L T Tr WH. It is joined to interrogative particles and pronouns:
μὴ γὰρ etc.
John 7:41 (do ye then suppose that the Christ comes out of Galilee?
What, doth the Christ, etc.?);
μὴ γὰρ...
οὐκ,
1 Corinthians 11:22 (
what! since ye are so eager to eat and drink,
have ye not, etc.?);
τίς γάρ,
τί γάρ:
Matthew 27:23 (
τί γὰρ κακὸν ἐποίησεν, ye demand that he be crucified like a malefactor,
Why, what evil hath he done?);
Matthew 9:5 (your thoughts are evil;
which then do ye suppose to be the easier, etc.?);
Matthew 16:26;
Matthew 23:17,
19;
Luke 9:25;
Acts 19:35;
τί γάρ; for
τί γάρ ἐστι,
what then? i. e. what, under these circumstances, ought to be the conclusion?
Philippians 1:18 [cf. Ellicott at the passage];
πῶς γάρ,
Acts 8:31; cf. Klotz, the passage cited, p. 245ff; Kühner, ii., p. 726; [Jelf, ii., p. 608]; Winer's Grammar, 447 (416). Here belongs also the vexed passage
Luke 18:14 ἤ γὰρ ἐκεῖνος (so G T Tr marginal reading, but L WH Tr text
παῤ ἐκεῖνον)
or do ye suppose
then that
that man went down approved of God? cf. Winer's Grammar, 241 (226).
II. It adduces the Cause or gives the Reason of a preceding statement or opinion;
1. universally:
Matthew 2:5;
Matthew 6:24;
Mark 1:22;
Mark 9:6;
Luke 1:15,
18;
Luke 21:4;
John 2:25;
Acts 2:25;
Romans 1:9,
11;
1 Corinthians 11:5;
Hebrews 2:8;
1 John 2:19;
Revelation 1:3, and very often. In
John 4:44 γάρ assigns the reason why now at length Jesus betook himself into Galilee; for the authority denied to a prophet in his own country (Galilee), he had previously to seek and obtain among strangers; cf.
John 4:45; Meyer [yet see edition 6 (Weiss)] at the passage;
Strauss, Leben Jesu, i. 725 edition 3;
Neander, Leben Jesu, p. 385f edition 1 [American translation, pp. 100, 168];
Ewald, Jahrbb. d. Biblical Wissensch. x., p. 108ff.
2. Often the sentences are connected in such a way that either some particular statement is established by a general proposition (`the particular by the universal'), as in
Matthew 7:8;
Matthew 13:12;
Matthew 22:14;
Mark 4:22,
25;
John 3:20;
1 Corinthians 12:12;
Hebrews 5:13, etc.; or what has been stated generally, is proved to be correctly stated by a particular instance (`the universal by the particular'):
Mark 7:10;
Luke 12:52,
58;
Romans 7:2;
1 Corinthians 1:26;
1 Corinthians 12:8.
3. To sentences in which something is commanded or forbidden,
γάρ annexes the reason why the thing must either be done or avoided:
Matthew 1:20;
Matthew 2:20;
Matthew 3:9;
Matthew 7:2;
Romans 13:11;
Colossians 3:3;
1 Thessalonians 4:3;
Hebrews 2:2, and very often. In
Philippians 2:13 γάρ connects the verse with
Philippians 2:12 thus: work out your salvation with most intense earnestness, for nothing short of this accords with God's saving efficiency within your souls, to whom you owe both the good desire and the power to execute that desire.
4. To questions,
γάρ annexes the reason why the question is asked:
Matthew 2:2 (we ask this with good reason, for we have seen the star which announces his birth);
Matthew 22:28;
Romans 14:10;
1 Corinthians 14:9;
Galatians 1:10.
5. Frequently the statement which contains the cause is interrogative;
τίς,
τί γάρ:
Luke 22:27;
Romans 4:3;
Romans 11:34;
1 Corinthians 2:16;
1 Corinthians 7:16;
Hebrews 1:5;
Hebrews 12:7;
τί γάρ for
τί γάρ ἐστι,
Romans 3:3 (cf. Fritzsche at the passage; [Ellicott on
Philippians 1:18]);
ἵνα τί γάρ,
1 Corinthians 10:29;
ποία γάρ,
James 4:14 [WH text omits; Tr brackets
γάρ].
6. Sometimes in answers it is so used to make good the substance of a preceding question that it can be rendered
yea, assuredly:
1 Corinthians 9:10;
1 Thessalonians 2:20; cf. Kühner, ii., p. 724.
7. Sometimes it confirms, not a single statement, but the point of an entire discussion:
Romans 2:25 (it is no advantage to a wicked Jew,
for etc.). On the other hand, it may so confirm but a single thought as to involve the force of asseveration and be rendered
assuredly, yea:
Romans 15:27 (
εὐδόκησαν γάρ); so also
καὶ γάρ,
Philippians 2:27.
8. It is often said that the sentence of which
γάρ introduces the cause, or renders the reason, is not expressed, but must be gathered from the context and supplied in thought. But that this ellipsis is wholly imaginary is clearly shown by
Klotz ad Devar. ii. 1, p. 236f, cf. Winer's Grammar, 446f (415f). The particle is everywhere used in reference to something expressly stated. Suffice it to append a very few examples; the true nature of many others is shown under the remaining heads of this article: In
Matthew 5:12 before
γάρ some supply 'nor does this happen to you alone'; but the reason is added why a great reward in heaven is reserved for those who suffer persecution, which reason consists in this, that the prophets also suffered persecution, and that their reward is great no one can doubt. In
Romans 8:18 some have supplied 'do not shrink from this
suffering with Christ'; but on the use of
γάρ here, see III. a. below. On
Mark 7:28 [T Tr WH omit; L brackets
γάρ], where before
καὶ γάρ some supply 'but help me,' or 'yet we do not suffer even the dogs to perish with hunger,' see 10 b. below. In
Acts 9:11 before
γάρ many supply 'he will listen to thee'; but it introduces the reason for the preceding command.
9. When in successive statements
γάρ is repeated twice or thrice, or even four or five times, either
a. one and the same thought is confirmed by as many arguments, each having its own force, as there are repetitions of the particle [Meyer denies the coordinate use of
γάρ in the
N. T., asserting that the first is argumentative, the second explicative, see his commentaries on the passage to follow, also on
Romans 8:6]:
Matthew 6:32;
Romans 16:18f; or
b. every succeeding statement contains the reason for its immediate predecessor, so that the statements are subordinate one to another:
Mark 6:52;
Matthew 16:25-27;
John 3:19;
John 5:21;
Acts 2:15;
Romans 4:13-15;
Romans 8:2f,
5;
1 Corinthians 3:3;
1 Corinthians 9:15-17 (where five times in
G L T Tr WH); 1 Corinthians 16:7;
James 2:10, etc.; or
c. it is repeated in a different sense:
Mark 9:39-41;
Romans 5:6f (where cf. Winer's Grammar, 453 (422));
Romans 10:2-5 (four times);
James 4:14 [WH text omits; Tr brackets the first
γάρ, L WH marginal reading omit the second].
10. καὶ γάρ (on which cf. Kühner, ii., p. 854f; Winer's Grammar, 448 (417); [Ellicott on
2 Thessalonians 3:10]) is
a. for, and truly (
etenim,
namque, [the simple rendering
for is regarded as inexact by many; cf. Meyer on
2 Corinthians 13:4 and see
Hartung, Partikeln, i. 137f; Krüger, § 69, 32, 21]):
Mark 14:70;
Luke 22:37 [L Tr brackets
γάρ];
1 Corinthians 5:7;
1 Corinthians 11:9;
1 Corinthians 12:13.
b. for also, for even (
nam etiam):
Matthew 8:9;
Mark 10:45;
Luke 6:32;
John 4:45;
1 Corinthians 12:14, etc. In
Mark 7:28 καὶ γάρ [R G L brackets]
τὰ κυνάρια etc. the woman, by adducing an example, confirms what Christ had said, but the example is of such a sort as also to prove that her request ought to be granted.
τὲ γάρ for indeed (German
denn ja):
Romans 7:7; cf. Fritzsche at the passage; Winer's Grammar, 448 (417).
ἰδοὺ γάρ, see under
ἰδού.
III. It serves to explain, make clear, illustrate, a preceding thought or word:
for equivalent to
that is, namely;
a. so that it begins an exposition of the thing just announced [cf. Winer's Grammar, 454f (423f)]:
Matthew 1:18 [R G]; Matthew 19:12;
Luke 11:30;
Luke 18:32. In
Romans 8:18 γάρ introduces a statement setting forth the nature of the
συνδοξασθῆναι just mentioned.
b. so that the explanation is intercalated into the discourse, or even added by way of appendix:
Matthew 4:18;
Mark 1:16;
Mark 2:15;
Mark 5:42;
Romans 7:1;
1 Corinthians 16:5. In
Mark 16:4 the information
ἦν γὰρ μέγας σφόδρα is added to throw light on all that has been previously said (in
Mark 16:3f) about the stone.
IV. As respects position:
γάρ never occupies the first place in a sentence, but the second, or third, or even the fourth (
ὁ τοῦ θεοῦ γὰρ υἱός,
2 Corinthians 1:19 — according to true text). Moreover, "not the number but the nature of the word after which it stands is the point to be noticed,"
Hermann on Sophocles Phil. 1437.
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